Search for dissertations about: "Human Oriented Design"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 109 swedish dissertations containing the words Human Oriented Design.
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1. Participatory inquiry : Collaborative Design
Abstract : This dissertation focuses on design sessions in which users and stakeholders participate. It demonstrates how material from field studies can be used in exploratory design sessions. The emphasis is on the staging and realization of experiments with ‘possible futures’. READ MORE
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2. Designing with Machine Learning in Digital Pathology : Augmenting Medical Specialists through Interaction Design
Abstract : Recent advancements in machine learning (ML) have led to a dramatic increase in AI capabilities for medical diagnostic tasks. Despite technical advances, developers of predictive AI models struggle to integrate their work into routine clinical workflows. READ MORE
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3. Participatory Design in Museums : Visitor-Oriented Perspectives on Exhibition Design
Abstract : This thesis is about the design of technology for museum exhibitions. More specifically, it explores different ways in which visitors can contribute to museum exhibition design and how technology can support learning-related activities within museum exhibitions. READ MORE
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4. Work-oriented design of computer artifacts
Abstract : This thesis is an inquiry into the human activity of designing computer artifacts that are useful to people in their daily activity at work. The emphasis is on opportunities and constraints for industrial democracy and quality of work.First, the philosophical foundation of design of computer artifacts is considered. READ MORE
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5. Designing Monstrous Experiences Through Soma Design
Abstract : There is currently a wave of research and development of novel on-body technologies and materials, including shape-changing technologies to be worn on or used close to the body. Traditional interaction design methods and interface models are not always a good fit for designing meaningful interactions with these technologies as they primarily interact with our somatic selves—not our language-oriented, symbol-processing ways of being in the world. READ MORE